Earlier this week, in another outrageous, egregious miscarriage of justice, the Cuyahoga County Grand Jury failed to indict the white police officer who killed a 12-year-old black child, Tamir Rice. And once again the justification for letting a uniformed murderer go free is that the officer believed he was in mortal danger.

When are we going to demand a truthful accounting of who is actually in mortal danger in this country? How many black men, women and children have to die a brutalizing “death-by-scared cop” (Stacey Patton) before those of us who are white bring our collective hearts, minds, and souls to the task of excavating, naming and untying the lethal knot that resides in white imaginations? This knot has many threads – each one a legacy and manifestation of white supremacy: Threads of fear of black bodies. Threads of contempt for black bodies. Threads of envy for black bodies. Threads of rage at so-called “insubordination.” Threads of feeling powerless while we wield structural power. Threads of feeling small even when we’re armed with assault weapons.

It is not the work of black people to unearth, diagnose, untie and disarm this lethal knot of white supremacist consciousness that remains so deeply rooted and endemic in the white psyche. This is our work as white people. None of us is exempt from this work. You and I and all of us who are white must do this work in every relationship and vocation at our disposal – as parents, friends, co-workers, neighbors, and citizens of this nation.

If we fail to do this deep work, white demagogues like Donald Trump will continue to step into the breach, misname the mortal danger, shore up the guns and tanks, and stoke the lethal fear with terrifying and terrorizing consequences. And we’ll have no one to blame but ourselves.

With fierce hope,Melanie S. Morrison

This was originally posted on formations.//living at the intersections of self, social, spirit. December 31, 2015. Photo is a family photo from the fall of 2014, printed in the New York Times, January 22, 2015.